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Africa Watch

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam and 5 Other Africa Megaprojects Propping Up The Continent’s Quiet Rise

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Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam construction. © Gioia Forster/DPA/Picture-alliance/Newscom/MaxPPP

Africa is unleashing a wave of ambitious, largely African-led infrastructure feats that promise to strengthen the continent’s slow but steady rise.

From Ethiopia’s self-built Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), a $5 billion powerhouse generating 6.45 GW to energize a nation and beyond, to Dangote’s $20 billion refinery, the continent is laying the foundation for growth, integration and sustainable development.

These projects, blending local ingenuity with strategic partnerships, are set to supercharge energy access, trade flows, and urban innovation by 2030. They will position the continent as a cultural and economic powerhouse that exports solutions, not just resources.

Below are 5 of such grand projects:

1. Grand Inga Dam, DRC: The Congo River’s $80 Billion Power Surge

Nestled at Inga Falls on the mighty Congo River, this colossal hydroelectric cascade—envisioned as seven dams totaling 40-70 GW—dwarfs even the Three Gorges Dam in scale. Spearheaded by the DRC government with African Development Bank backing, it’s a beacon of self-reliance amid the nation’s mineral wealth. By 2030, Grand Inga could flood the continent with clean energy, exporting power to South Africa, Nigeria, and beyond via transmission lines, slashing energy poverty for 600 million Africans and fueling industrial booms that could add $100 billion annually to regional GDP. This isn’t just electricity—it’s Africa’s green grid ignition, drawing tech giants for data centers cooled by the Congo’s endless flow.

2. Dangote Refinery, Nigeria: Africa’s $20 Billion Fuel Independence Engine
Aliko Dangote’s Lagos behemoth, Africa’s largest single-train refinery at 650,000 barrels per day (with plans to hit 1.4 million), was bootstrapped by Nigerian capital to end decades of fuel imports. Operational since 2023, it processes local crude into gasoline, diesel, and petrochemicals, conserving $10 billion yearly in forex while exporting surplus to West and East Africa. By 2028, expect stabilized prices continent-wide, birthing a refining revolution that cuts import dependency by 70% across sub-Saharan nations, sparks 100,000+ jobs, and transforms Nigeria into a petrochemical exporter rivaling the Gulf—propelling Africa’s energy sovereignty and intra-continental trade under AfCFTA.

3. Lobito Atlantic Railway, Angola/DRC/Zambia: The $500 Million Mineral Highway to the Atlantic
Reviving a colonial-era line into a 1,700 km modern artery, this US- and African-financed rail (led by Angola’s consortium with $555 million upgrades) links copper-rich Copperbelt mines to Lobito Port, slashing transit times from 45 days by truck to under 10. By 2027, it could ferry 100 million tons of critical minerals yearly, decarbonizing supply chains with rail’s 300,000-ton CO2 savings and unlocking $10 billion in annual trade. For Africa, it’s a trans-continental lifeline—from Atlantic to Indian Ocean—boosting Zambia’s exports by 30%, catalyzing agribusiness and ecotourism, and positioning Southern Africa as the green tech mineral hub that outpaces China’s dominance.

4. LAPSSET Corridor, Kenya/Ethiopia/South Sudan: $16 Billion East African Trade Superhighway
This multi-nation lifeline—featuring Lamu Port’s 32 berths, 1,700 km roads/rail, and oil pipelines—unites landlocked giants with the Indian Ocean, Kenyan-led with $16 billion in phased investments. Already handling 1.2 million containers yearly, full rollout by 2030 will pump 3% into Kenya’s GDP while slashing Ethiopia’s logistics costs by 40%. Continentally, it forges an equatorial land bridge to West Africa, igniting $50 billion in regional trade, 1.5 million jobs, and special economic zones that export Kenyan tech and Ethiopian coffee—heralding East Africa’s leap as the AfCFTA’s beating heart.

5. New Administrative Capital, Egypt: $58 Billion Smart City Beacon for North Africa
Rising 45 km east of Cairo, this 700 km² desert metropolis—Egyptian-state driven with 51% military funding—houses 6.5 million residents, Africa’s tallest tower, and relocated ministries in a bid to decongest the ancient capital. By 2030, its AI-integrated “Green River” park and solar farms will pioneer sustainable urbanism, adding 2-3% to Egypt’s GDP via FDI in its business district. As a prototype for African smart cities, it could inspire 20+ similar hubs, exporting Egyptian engineering to the Sahel and Horn, fostering diplomatic enclaves that amplify Africa’s voice in global forums and cementing the Nile Valley as the continent’s innovation north star.

These initiatives signal Africa’s pivot from aid dependency to self-mastery, potentially lifting 100 million from poverty by 2040 through interconnected prosperity.

As GERD lights up the Horn, watch these projects weave a tapestry of dominance—where African hands build, and the world plugs in.

Africa Watch

Pope Leo XIV to Embark on Ambitious 10-Day Tour of Four African Nations

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Pope Leo XIV will depart on Monday, April 13, 2026, for a major 10-day apostolic journey to Africa, visiting Algeria, Cameroon, Angola, and Equatorial Guinea.

Vatican officials are describing the tour as a deliberate effort to shine a global spotlight on the continent.

The trip, spanning nearly 18,000 kilometers (11,185 miles) and including stops in 11 cities and towns, will be the longest and most ambitious overseas journey of the pontiff’s young papacy.

During the tour, running from April 13 to 23, the 70-year-old Pope is scheduled to deliver 25 speeches, hold meetings with political leaders, and engage extensively with local Catholic communities.

Cardinal Michael Czerny, a senior Vatican official and close adviser to Pope Leo, said the visit is intended “to help turn the world’s attention to Africa.”

He noted that by heading to the continent early in his pontificate, the first American Pope is sending a strong message that “Africa matters” and should not be overlooked amid other global concerns.

Africa is currently the fastest-growing region for Catholicism, with more than 20% of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics now living on the continent. Equatorial Guinea, which has not hosted a papal visit since 1982, is over 70% Catholic, while significant Catholic populations exist in Cameroon and Angola. Algeria, by contrast, is overwhelmingly Muslim with a small Catholic community.

The tour comes as Pope Leo has taken an increasingly vocal stance against the ongoing war in Iran. Vatican officials say the African visit reflects both the Church’s pastoral priorities and its commitment to global solidarity with regions often marginalized in international discourse.

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Africa Watch

U.S. Warns Citizens to Reconsider Travel to Nigeria Citing Terrorism

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Washington, D.C. – The United States has issued a strong travel advisory urging its citizens to reconsider all travel to Nigeria, citing persistent threats of terrorism, kidnapping, civil unrest, and armed attacks across large parts of the country.

In an update released last Wednesday, the US State Department placed several Nigerian states under its highest-level “Do Not Travel” warning due to the deteriorating security situation.

The advisory also authorised the voluntary departure of non-emergency US embassy staff and their families from Abuja, describing the overall environment as increasingly challenging for American citizens and diplomats.

Despite deepening security cooperation between Washington and Abuja — including counter-terrorism support, intelligence sharing, maritime security, and military training with US-supplied aircraft and helicopters — the move underscores the gap between strategic partnership and the daily reality of insecurity faced by civilians and foreigners in many regions.

The advisory warns that violent attacks could occur with little or no warning in public places such as markets, hotels, places of worship, schools, and transportation hubs.

Nigerian authorities have yet to issue a formal response to the latest warning. In the past, officials have criticised such advisories for unfairly tarnishing the country’s image and potentially harming diaspora travel, international conferences, and foreign investment at a time when Nigeria is seeking economic recovery.

The development comes amid a fresh surge in deadly attacks in parts of the country, raising renewed concerns about the effectiveness of ongoing counter-insurgency operations against groups such as Boko Haram and ISWAP, as well as banditry and communal violence in other regions.

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Africa Watch

Ghana Launches Month-Long Cultural Festival in Ethiopia to Strengthen Pan-African Ties

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Addis Ababa, Ethiopia – The Ghana Embassy in Ethiopia and Permanent Mission to the African Union and UNECA has officially launched “Ghana Month,” a major cultural and diplomatic initiative aimed at deepening ties between Ghana and Ethiopia while showcasing Ghana’s rich heritage across Africa.

The celebration, running throughout May 2026 at Kuriftu Village in partnership with Kuriftu Resorts, will feature cultural performances, creative exhibitions, music, fashion, culinary experiences, and entrepreneurial showcases. It is expected to attract diplomats, business leaders, tourists, and the Ethiopian public.

Counsellor Ms Grace Maakinyi Mbiba, in her opening remarks, described the initiative as “an opportunity to showcase the diversity of Ghana’s heritage and the dynamism of its creative and entrepreneurial sectors.”

Ambassador Dr Robert Afriyie commended Kuriftu Resorts for the collaboration, calling it a true embodiment of Pan-Africanism. He noted that the event aligns with Ghana’s broader vision of using tourism, culture, music, fashion, and history to promote continental unity and economic cooperation.

The Ambassador highlighted the growing bilateral relationship between Ghana and Ethiopia and positioned the month-long celebration as a practical platform to leverage the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) through cultural exchange and people-to-people connections.

The initiative is expected to boost tourism, trade, and mutual understanding between the two nations.

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